Book Reviews
October 1997
Anarchist Farm by Jane Doe
A.D. by Saab Lofton
One of the things I like about small presses is that they'll take
chances on authors who write about things outside of the mainstream.
III Publishing has been one of my favorite sources for libertarian/anarchist
fiction and science fiction ever since I picked up and totally enjoyed
The Last Days of Christ the Vampire. Now they bring us two fine
contributions to anarchist SF literature.
If you loved George Orwell's Animal Farm, you'll love this "sequel."
Many who have read Orwell's classic missed the basic underlying
anti-authoritarian message, instead reading it as an allegory about
the Soviet Union. In Anarchist Farm we find an extension of the
philosophies underlying Animal Farm, but this time with a more upbeat
outcome. Contemporary concerns such as ecocide and animal rights
are also woven into this readable book. In fact, it is written in
a style appropriate for teenage readers.
As in Animal Farm, the main characters here are animals and they
talk. They also have cute names. Pancho is a pig who has escaped
from the regime that has taken over the farm portrayed in Animal
Farm. He is befriended by some wild animals, who are later revealed
to be the "Forest Defenders." The Defenders turn out to be very
similar to Earth First! Pancho eventually finds a farm whose owner
has recently died. In response to the death of their benevolent
owner, the animals turn the farm into a successful anarchist collective.
As the months roll by, the animal start to worry about what might
happen to them when the humans come to auction off the farm. The
ending will surprise you. It should also be mentioned that the book
also deals with monkeywrenching and its consequences.
Anarchist Farm is funny, thought-provoking, and inspiring. It's
an excellent sequel to Animal Farm. Let's hope that a few more readers
"get it" this time.
A.D. is a science fiction story set in the U.S.A. in the near future.
Radical changes have altered the very political geography of the
continent: the Klux Klan Klan and other white supremacists control
what was the southern U.S., the Nation of Islam controls what was
the Midwest, and the West Coast is all that remains of the old U.S.
"liberal democracy."
Fred Hampton Rush Sr. is a middle-aged black man living in Chicago,
which is now the capital city of the Lost-Found Nation of Islam
in North America. Fred is trying to live the life of a model citizen
in a society strictly controlled by the Nation of Islam. He has
a wife, a son, and a nice home. However, a series of events radicalize
Rush, turning him into a dissident, and he soon finds himself a
fugitive from the NOI's police. He is then kidnapped by an evil
NOI scientist and cryogenically frozen. He wakes up centuries later,
only to discover that everything has changed radically again. The
world has been turned into a libertarian socialist democracy that
has high tech and the ability to time travel. The boook from this
point on becomes mostly a travelogue which examines what life is
like in this future society.
A.D. has some pretty weird twists and takes a few paths that are
incidental to the story line, but overall this is a fascinating
and fun book. Lofton is adept at illustrating what life would be
like living in an authoritarian world controlled by the Nation of
Islam and is very on target at describing a society that is based
on freedom and anarchy. Some of his comments about transitional
housing, public libraries, and censorship are so fresh, that it
for these alone that the book is worth reading. I imagine that this
book is not popular at NOI meetings. Oh well, it's time they got
skewered like the authoritarians that they are.
-- Reviewed by Chuck0
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